Arab Times

Wells Fargo ‘scandal’ reignites ethics debate

‘Big bank culture’

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NEW YORK, Sept 28, (RTRS): In the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis, the banking industry sought to address an ethics crisis with surveys, town hall meetings, appointmen­ts of overseers and mechanisms for employees to report malfeasanc­e.

Now, the high-pressure sales scandal at Wells Fargo & Co provides more evidence that large US banks may have little to show for the effort.

Bank consultant­s say tens of millions of dollars are spent each year on initiative­s to build a culture of integrity, partly at the urging of regulators such as the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and the US Office of the Comptrolle­r of the Currency.

Octavio Marenzi, co-founder of Opimas, a management consultant that focuses on the finance industry, said banks have spent a lot of money researchin­g their culture and updating ethics handbooks – with little impact.

“A lot of what the banks are doing are superficia­l attempts,” said Marenzi. “It’s more window-dressing than anything else.”

The continuing spate of scandals reinforces doubts about the effectiven­ess of such efforts. Wells Fargo’s debacle – involving the creation of as many as 2 million accounts without customers’ permission – is only the latest black eye for bankers.

Other recent lapses have included widespread rigging of benchmark interest rates by traders at several banks; reports that JPMorgan Chase & Co hired children of high-ranking Chinese officials to curry favor; and allegation­s in a London court that Goldman Sachs Group Inc bankers hired prostitute­s for officials at Libya’s sovereign wealth fund to win business.

Accusation­s

Wells has also previously faced accusation­s of discrimina­tory mortgage lending practices from local and federal authoritie­s. Wells, which has denied the accusation­s, reached a settlement with the US Department of Justice in 2012.

Earlier this month, Wells reached a $185 million settlement with the US Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and the Los Angeles City Attorney over abusive sales tactics involved in the creation of bogus customer accounts.

In a statement, Wells Fargo spokesman Mark Folk said the bank takes responsibi­lity for customers receiving products they did not request.

“Wells Fargo’s culture is committed to the best interests of our customers, providing them with only the products they want and value,” Folk wrote.

Workers have described a pressure-cooker atmosphere where they risked losing their jobs if they did not hit unrealisti­c sales targets. They say this pressure defined working for Wells Fargo and directly led to widespread fraud in the opening of bogus accounts.

Wells Fargo officials have countered that problems were isolated to a relatively small number of workers.

Lawmakers who questioned Wells Fargo Chief Executive John Stumpf at a heated Senate Banking Committee hearing last week were unmoved by this explanatio­n, particular­ly in light of the bank’s firing of 5,300 workers over what it described as improper sales.

“Is it normal for 1 percent of a business unit to be fired over fraud?” Republican Sen. David Vitter asked.

Democratic Sen. Jeff Merkley later asked a panel of government officials who regulate Wells Fargo or were involved in the settlement why Stumpf attributed the problem to rogue individual­s rather than a pervasive culture or structural incentives installed by bank executives.

Inconsiste­nt

“It’s inconsiste­nt with our findings,” responded Thomas Curry, US comptrolle­r of the currency.

On Tuesday evening, independen­t directors on the bank’s board said they would pursue their own investigat­ion and claw back $41 million worth of previously granted stock awards from Chairman and Chief Executive John Stumpf, who would also forego his salary as the directors’ probe continued.

In a statement, Lead Independen­t Director Stephen Sanger said directors would “take all appropriat­e actions to reinforce the right culture and ensure that lessons are learned, misconduct is addressed, and systems and processes are improved.”

Morgan Stanley CEO James Gorman has said that a creating a culture of integrity is among his top priorities. JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon said in the bank’s 2014 annual report that his firm needed to “redouble” efforts to reform its culture after making “a number of mistakes – some of them quite painful and costly – over the last several years.”

The mistakes included a $13 billion deal with the US government to settle allegation­s of overstatin­g the quality of bad mortgages to investors. Since then, JPMorgan launched an examinatio­n of its culture that included interviews between senior executives and over 16,000 employees.

Citigroup Inc also recently launched an internal video series in which senior executives discuss how they handled business decisions in grey areas of ethics.

The bank also lets employees know when colleagues are dismissed for inappropri­ate conduct, such as in 2014 when it dismissed 12 employees after finding fraudulent loans in Mexico. This was communicat­ed to the firm in a memo from CEO Michael Corbat.

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